THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG. PA. Pains in the Back W.J.IILMSWW" nil IHNII Mil C vtal STRONGEST BANK IN THE COUNTY Surplus Aro pymploniB of a wenV, torpid or fctoo.ooo Stagnant condition Ol 11. J Kidneys or livi.r. -.,d nro a warni'i-i it is extremely SILVER DOLLARS TO BE First National Bank, ha.:a'tioii!i to reflect, 00 importuM ia a l.t-slt'-.y nctu-n o: tnc-f r;.i"s. They are continuity attended by ss of eriorgy, luck of cvmrapp, and pomo linxa by fclr jiuy iotcbodintf and 0.2" Bpondoiii.y. "I hint nlr.s tit my bacK, could nit sleep nnd wh"ii I uot up In tho nutniliiR folt worse than the nWiit before. I bcirsin taking- Hood s Sarf.npurillu and now I can sleep and fret up feelintf rested nnd able to do my wotk. I attribute my cure entirely to Hood's Snrsnparllln." Mrs. J. N. I'efiiy, care H. 8. Copeland, Tike Koad, Ala. Hood's Sarsaparilla and Pills Cure kidney and liver trouble, relieve the back, and build up the whole system. Make no mistake, but deposit your savings in the Strongest Bank. OFFICERS: 5. V. M. LOW, President, J. M. STAVER, Vice President. E B. TUSTIN, Vice President. E. F. CARPENTER, Cashier. DIRECTORS: TWENTY M. l ow. . C Yorks, v H Tu.iin Fred Ikeler. J. M. Scaver, M. I. Ixw. THE COLUMBIAN. ; ESTABLISHED 1866. THE COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, 6sr.ui.isiiKi 1837. Consolidated 1869 Published Evkkv Thursday Mornino, At Bloomsburg. the County Seal 01 Columbia County, Pennsylvania. (JKO. E. Kf AVICI. L, Editor. 1). T. TASKEK, Local Editor. . GEO. C. ROAN, Eokumas. Tekms: Insiilethe county $1.00 a year in advance ; $1.50 if not paid in alvance. n ,(vfle thecounty, f 1.25 a year, strictly in A lvnce. Ml i'tm nunications should be addressed THE COLUMBIAN, Blooms urn, l'n. VIIURSDAY, DECEMBER 17. 19"J GOOD ROADS- Stale Grange Convention. Add.es by Hon. 0. L. Rhpno. Wilkes-flarrs, Pa.. Dec embers, 1903. This is not the time or place for extended remarks upon any sub ject, but for your information I will say that perhaps the most import ant matter for your consideration is that of good roads. Tons aud car loads of literature have been written on the necessity and desirability of good roads, demonstrating that yon can't build a good macadam road with clay and sand any more than you cau make a silk purse out of a ow's ear. The only question now emaining is, who shall pay for them. In 1894 I delivered an ad dress upon the subject in this city to a convention of county commis sioners, who adopted my idea, and it was afterwards approved by the State Bicycle Association, and by the State Grangers, and that cul minated in the act of 1895, uuder which our county has built and paid for many miles of roads in this county, and we have now a short section about completed at the ex pense of the county, known here as the Dallas road, and no doubt you will be pleased to go and see it. We ' think it a fair specimen of the roads which are to be built under the act of 1903, popularly known as the Sproul bill. The dominant thought in the act of 1895, and one that has domi nated my mind ever since is this, that the thoroughfares or highways contemplated by the act of 1903 are not township roads at all, there fore, the townships ought not to be required to contribute any thing towards the cost of them. The high ways or thoroughfares contemplated by the bproul bill are those which will be found in the laps and folds of the mountains behind which lie many townships on the borders of adjacent counties, or they will be found to be the leading lines of road through the rich, fat, river bottom lands, and the rich and populous mining and manufacturing districts, or in townships where there are found suburban residences. What I conceive to be township roads are the cross roads of the township, the byways of the townships, and those lines which lead to and from the farmers' houses to the farm villages. Those the townships always have and must continue to improve and keep in repair at their own expense. But, I repeat, that highways, lead ing thoroughfares and main .lines running through the laps and folds of the mountain to the various rail road stations and those running along the centres of the river val leys, are not township roads, they are first county roads, and when plaoed together become State roads. This I consider to be a rock bottom precedeut to any progress in the making of good roads. This feature is absent from the Sproul bill. It requires the townships to pay one sixth of the cost of any section of road. Now, the cost of a road properly built is from six to ten thousand dollars a mile, so that at kast cost, say of six thousand dol lars. the State would pay four thousand dollars, the county one thousand, and the township one thousand. No township outside of the rich suburban villages can afford Frank Ikeler, J. II. VoMlne Geo. S. Robbins, S C. Creaiy, Louis Gross, II. V. Ilower, to pay from one thousand to fifteen hundred dollars a mile for any number of miles, located in the farming districts, and I repeat they on ht not to be reouired to if thev could. Under this provision those townshitis which need btate and county aid first will get it last 01 not at all. Another reason why townships should be exempt from paying any portion of the cost of improved roads is the inequitable and unjust distribution of the public taxes. Corporate wealth pays five mills on the dollar to the State : wealth leaned out on interest in the vari mis forms navs four mills on the A dollar to the State, and no more, thus, they bear' none of the local burdens. Farm lands pay no State tax, it is true, but they bear thei full share ol all local taxes, which in this county, and presumably i;i every other county, arc at least three times as much as the taxs on these other forms of wealth. I re cently received a card from the tax collector of a township where I pur chased a farm tor four thousand dollar;. lie informed me that mv taxes were $48.50 for this year. Now, if I had loaned that money on a mortgage, my tax would have been just $16, aid uo more, and if I had borrowed the money to pay for the farm, or stock it, my tax would have been $48.50 plus $16, or $64.50. Now, I shall not follow up the question of the unjust levying and collectiou of taxes any further. That was pursued to its fullest ex tent by Mr. John Wanamaker some years ago iu a campaign document. The next proposition I make is this, that greater inequalities come from the distribution of taxes than from the collection of them. That is, all the taxes gathered into the State and county funds are distri buted in the cities among the "tax eaters" there, aud, except a small pro rata share of the school tax paid from the State into the various dis tricts, I cannot now call to mind any expenditure of public moneys in the farming district, the trend is all the other way. Prior to 1830 the farmers them selves with ax and grubbing hoe hewed out their highways. About 1830 the St3te expended a large sum of money in building canals, which was a great blessing to all the people. Those canals have been abondoned because they have been superseded as lines of traffic by the railroads. The next great public improve ment undertaken by the State was the establishment of a common schojl system in 1854. The people halted, balked, and some of them swore against it, but it has pro gressed until now it is universally approved as the greatest institution of the land. Since the inauguration of that magnificent enterprise the State has undertaken at its own expense to provide a grand system of charities, until now every helpless person is ong Hair "About year ago my hair was coming out very fast, so I bought a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor. It stopped the falling and made my hair grow very rapidly, until now it Is 45 inches in length." Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kans. There's another hunger than that of the stomach. Hair hunger, for instance. Hungry hair needs food, needs hair vigor Ayer's. This is why we say that Ayer's Hair Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy. ti.o iti. Aiidninuu. If your tfniKniht annul imply jrou. end u one ilollur 11,1,1 wo Wn express you a bottlo. ha lure and giro the nam of your nearest express ntlii-e. Address. J. C. A V l:K CO.. Lowell. Mum. furnished a home The deaf, the dumb, the blind, the insane, the idiotic, the criminal, and we are all proud of these institutions; there is uplift about it; there is an outward swing about it that thrills us all when we think of it. I confidently believe that we are on the eve ol an enterprise that will be of still greater blessing in a financial sense than sithcr of those which the State is now so magnifi cently supporting, I mean the era of good roads The Spoul bill is aimed in the right (".irection. It will dourtless need amen Iments now and then, but we must stand by it, in the main, and as farmers, I would advise you to insist upon its amendment at the present time only in respect to that feature of it which I have already referred to. It is bound to win, and no one is mote interested than the farmer, although everybody will be blessed and benefited, and ten years from now, or twenty-five years from now, we will all wonder that we have so long continued to wade through the dust and mire of our country roads. Two thousand years ago the people of the provinces of the Uo man Empire were in about the con dition that our rural districts are now, and thev made no headway in any change until they raised the cry that all roads lead to Rome; then they built roads which for a thousand years were the admiration of the world. Sj it would be with you; if you cau get the State and the counties to assume the building of the roads, and you agree to keep them 111 re pair under the direction of a county superintendent of highwavs, who should be an engineer and a man of character, you will find that the blessing which will come upon you will be inestimable. The act of 1903 appropriates six millions and a half of dollars for this purpose, to be expended in the next six years. That, supplement ed b the county fund of one-half more, would make in that time ten millions of dollars, and that would build 1,500 miles of first class macadam roads, nnd nearly all of that money will be poured into the rural districts, which will increase your wealth beyond the dreams of avarice. Go on with this enter prise, and take the magnificent sum which is tendered to you by the btate authorities, and the result must be entirely satisfactory. DBLTT OF P0LITI08 IN PENS'A State Chairman Penrose Communicating wim nit Lieutenants. The Democrats Will Meol in April. The Republican county leaders of rtnnsyivania are being notified by oiaie cnairman renross that the Republican state convention will be tieia in Harnsburg not later than the third Wednesday of April next, so as to have it out of the way be fore the national convention, which is likely to be held the middle nf June. The Democratic state com mittee will also meet iu Harrisburg on the third Wednesday of April to fix the date of the state convention and elect a chairman to succeed Senator James K. P. Hall, of Ridg way, who is again a candidate. The only nominations to be made by the conventions next year will be for a justice of the Supreme Court to fill the place made by the denjli of Chief Justice Mc Collum, which is being temporarily filled by Samuel Gustine Thorn of Philadelphia, Democrat, by ap pointment of the governor. The only other business of the conven tion beside adopting the usual plat forms will be to elect delegates-at-large to the national convention and approve the sixty-tour national d-legates chosen by the delegations rpm congressional distri cts. BUY AT HOME. N All the stores are very with their displays of holiday pretty goods, au iniuiigs 01 cnnstnias s are busy selecting their shopr :ers Rifts. Bloomsburg has stores of whir4i it is may wen be proud, and t little need to go away, from there home . " . """pping. ieep tne money in Bloomsburg. A EOAKE AT DAHVILLE- Danville had a scare on Monday, occasioned by the arrival th?re of the Beunett-Moultou Theatrical Company, one of the number of which was claimed to be affected with small-pox. The fact was learned after the train left sha mokin, when the conductor observ ing the strange and unusual ap pearance of the man's face, asked him the cause ol it and he answered small-pox. He ascertained the company's destination and immedi ately sent word ahead to Danville to be on the lookout. The Bo.ud of Health took prompt action, and sent officers to the station to forbid the company to leave the car. It was finally decided to quarantine the victim, and he was accordingly put in a car with a nurse, aud run in upon a siding at Dougal, a short distance below Milton. The other members of the company are at West Milton, but will disband and return to their homes as soon as they receive their pay. Later in the day on Monday, it was learned that every member ot the company had been vaccinated, after taking an antiseptic bath; every bit of their clothing and bag gage had been thoroughly fumigat ed before their arrival at Danville, and under the circumstances it believed that all danger of contagion so 'ar as the other members of the company were concerned baa been removed. The company was book ed for Danville all this week. A PRETTY WINDOW- Since the enlargement of Pursel's store front ample opportunity has Deen given tor decorating the win dows. They are always attractive, but just now Mr. John Knies has surpassed himself in arranging the lower window. Great taste has been displayed, and the result is exceedingly attractive. It is trim med in white silk, and contains a great variety of holiday goods. It is attracting much attention. Mr. Knies took a course of lessons in decorating, in New York last fall. and this in conjunction with a natural talent for that kind of work, has made him an expert at the business. What Shall We Have for Breakfast ? This question rii-s in the family every day. Let us answer ii today- Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful oessert, i'reparcd In two minutes. No boilinc t no balcine t simply add boiling water and set to cool. Flavors; l.emon, Orange, Uaspherry and Stiawberry. Get a package at youj grocers lo-uay. 10 cents. Jj-I7 4t Corner Stone Opened- The corner stone cf the old Pres byterian Church was reached on Wednesday, and iu it was found a small tin box. The contents will not be known uutil the return of Mr. F. G. Yorks the end of this week. The box is at his house. The meptillir nf the Tmun Pminr.il held last uiht appointed W. V. Robbius to collect the 1903 dupli cate. Among the other business trarmnrrpH wac the na ecu nt r( o resolution recognizing the Good iir.'it . win rire company as tne lourtti fire company of the Town, and flssip-nino the rnmnenu that tvl!. O O " J"- - tion in all future parades and de monstrations. O A. T C IX I A . Bears the 1 Km m "m kml BOqpK 11 1 Silverware as Gifts. At almost one third less than Jewelry Stores charge you for it. Children's Cups, Cream and Sugar Sets, I Match and Hair Receivers. Cake Butter Knives, Tea Sets (either 3 or miTATlON TIFFANY WARE at about l-IO the cost of the genuine, and it takes an expert to tell the difference. Fruit Bowls, Syrup Jugs, Tobacco Jars, and Smoking Sets, ROGERS SILVERWARE. Wm. Rogers' Knives, Forks and Spoons in 2 ounce goods. Dessert, Table and Tea Spoons in Handsome cases, either Oxidized or Bright. F. P. BLOOMSBURG, The Strenuous Like. KverV HaV th SV&Im niirla a CMrtnln - -J w ... " wva luill nunniitv nf iiiitrmrtn mniiur -v .! k ,t -.... ..j . . . . .... v.- ...HI,., IU BUfl'IJ IIIC deficiencies of the dny before. The building up process must begin at the breakfast table. u2t" tn new cereal, tattes good and fur- iiiMica uiui material, a ureakiast ol Jt fits the entire hnHv fnr th the day. Jf ig made ot bebt selected makes vou want nnnihr Ynn ran UrN f -- - w vmv 4 at any meal. At grocers eveiywhere, ,t-ia ly P. M. REILXY, Practical Plumber, Steam, Gas and Hot Water Fitter- steam and Hot Water Heating. Lead Burn. ing. Sanitary Dumbing of all Descrip. tions. All Work Guaranteed. Estimates Cheerfully Furnished. 438 CENTRE STREET, BELL'PHONE BLOOMSBURG, PA. GlVgF) For Particulars see Window at Townsend's Clothing1 Store, Bloomsburg, Pa. I Dishes, Sugar Shells, Childrens' Sets. 4 piece sets.) PURSEL. - - PENA. W. H. riOORE, main and iron stkeicts, Bloomsburg, Pa. Our Fall and Winter SHOES are now in stock. By my careful watching the needs of the people in the shoe line I am able to furnish you with shoes for style, fit and service far above the ordinary shoe. Come in and let us Fit you with a pair. W. H. MOORE, Cor. Main and Iron Sta. BLOOMSBUBG, PA.